557
557
Apr 22, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 557
favorite 0
quote 0
that got so high on apple? >> i guess the real risk of self-incrimination i'm going to go ahead and say wall street expectations. i mean, the company has done a fantastic job over the last decade with their product portfolio. and they've really come to dominate a couple markets. tablets, obviously, and smartphones as well. i think the biggest problem is that they've taken all the profits that are available there. and there just isn't room to grow once the market is saturated. >> bill, what do you nithink is going on? from the outside it would appear one of the knocks on apple right now is t innovation is more incremental than transformational. steve jobs is gone. should expectations be coming down anyway for this company? >> i think you're right, bill, the company has been a victim of its own success. they beat wall street expectations for over 30 quarters. i think lulled us all into believing that would extend forever. think about the stock at $700 in the fall. people were starting to bake in apple tv estimate
that got so high on apple? >> i guess the real risk of self-incrimination i'm going to go ahead and say wall street expectations. i mean, the company has done a fantastic job over the last decade with their product portfolio. and they've really come to dominate a couple markets. tablets, obviously, and smartphones as well. i think the biggest problem is that they've taken all the profits that are available there. and there just isn't room to grow once the market is saturated. >>...
544
544
Apr 24, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 544
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> and then, how about apple? hovering around $400 a share, failing to impress shareholders with t earnings last night. but is wall street just overreacting to what is still a very profitable, strong company? >> tim cook admits, they are a mature technology company. doesn't make them a bad company, though, right? >> but does it make them valued at 700? >> that's the question. >> just how big a threat are the hacks like we saw at that fake ap tweet yesterday to the market's integrity. cfte commissioner bart shulton weighs in on that. he wrote an op-ed piece today and we'll get his comments, coming up. >> the dow jones industrial average down just a fraction. been a negative day all day, but we are off of the worst levels, 14,712, last trade of the blue chip average. nasdaq looks like this, highest level of the day. in positive territory, keeping in positive territory with a gain of about seven points but a quarter of a percent. s&p 500 looks like this, similar chart pattern as the nasdaq, where it too hovers a to t
. >> and then, how about apple? hovering around $400 a share, failing to impress shareholders with t earnings last night. but is wall street just overreacting to what is still a very profitable, strong company? >> tim cook admits, they are a mature technology company. doesn't make them a bad company, though, right? >> but does it make them valued at 700? >> that's the question. >> just how big a threat are the hacks like we saw at that fake ap tweet yesterday to...
117
117
Apr 18, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 117
favorite 0
quote 0
and apple, down again below 400 bucks. earnings next week, but apple down nearly 3% right now at 391 bucks. guys, back to you. >> lowest since december of '11. thanks, josh. see you later. ubs chairman axel vaber says he thinks investors are in a state of uncertainty. maria bartiromo sat down with mr. vaber in this exclusive interview. >> dr. axel, good to have you on the program. thanks so much for joining us once again. >> a pleasure. >> are you seeing a change in terms of investor attitudes towards capital markets, towards equities in particular, given the fact that recently we've seen a little volatility in the market. are you seeing clients change their strategies? >> well, very clearly, clients at the moment are very uncertain. so i would say we're seeing it pretty much a hands-off period in the market again. january, february, was pretty good in that sense, that the market was actually still running well, but march was more difficult for everyone. so clients are, at the moment, still in a high degree of uncertainty.
and apple, down again below 400 bucks. earnings next week, but apple down nearly 3% right now at 391 bucks. guys, back to you. >> lowest since december of '11. thanks, josh. see you later. ubs chairman axel vaber says he thinks investors are in a state of uncertainty. maria bartiromo sat down with mr. vaber in this exclusive interview. >> dr. axel, good to have you on the program. thanks so much for joining us once again. >> a pleasure. >> are you seeing a change in...
120
120
Apr 24, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 120
favorite 0
quote 0
case in point is apple. at least 17 brokerages slashing their price targets today, including lazard, ubs, and alliance bernstein. i'd also mention boeing, though, today. boeing did enjoy a nice pop, maintained its full-year guidance, pleasing investors. this second group here, now, this is an interesting group of companies. these are companies that beat on the bottom line, but they missed on the top line. one name, one example would be whirlpool. the ceo actually talking to our own carl quintanilla earlier today and the ceo saying the only place internationally he saw real, true growth was china. that stock down today, but still up about 80% over the past nine months. and procter & gamble took a nasty tumble today. organic sales and guidance disappointing investors. and we'll end here on these three names. these names missed on both the bottom line and the top line. waste management. i know you two were talking to the ceo about an hour ago. i thought it was interesting when you asked him how he's going to be
case in point is apple. at least 17 brokerages slashing their price targets today, including lazard, ubs, and alliance bernstein. i'd also mention boeing, though, today. boeing did enjoy a nice pop, maintained its full-year guidance, pleasing investors. this second group here, now, this is an interesting group of companies. these are companies that beat on the bottom line, but they missed on the top line. one name, one example would be whirlpool. the ceo actually talking to our own carl...
121
121
Apr 18, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 121
favorite 0
quote 0
a dayt apple fell below $400, now at 31.66 on the nasdaq composite, and the s&p down ten-plus points at 1541, and we are just moments away from earnings from the big three, ibm, microsoft, and google. we have them all covered for you. david garrity from gba research. >> wow. >> yeah, we're back on "power lunch" days. >> is that an octabox. >> jon fortt, josh lipton. first, heather hughes and rob malcolm, along with greg ip "the economist." everybody's in the water, so we can just jump in. heather, what do you make from the markets this week? what's the message from this very volatile market in your view? >> well, the markets have picked up volatility. before last week, the vix volatility measure was at all-time lows, since 2007. that, of course, has increased, but it will be interesting when we get these earnings numbers coming out now. of course, corporate profits, that's key. it seems like it's coming from revenue minus costs, we're cutting cost sides of the equation, not necessarily revenue and topline growth. it so will be interesting to see what those numbers are as we get them.
a dayt apple fell below $400, now at 31.66 on the nasdaq composite, and the s&p down ten-plus points at 1541, and we are just moments away from earnings from the big three, ibm, microsoft, and google. we have them all covered for you. david garrity from gba research. >> wow. >> yeah, we're back on "power lunch" days. >> is that an octabox. >> jon fortt, josh lipton. first, heather hughes and rob malcolm, along with greg ip "the economist."...